Комментарии:
Thank you for this lol ❤️
ОтветитьGreat video. Opening my mind!
ОтветитьBest explanation ive come across so far. However i still csnt fathom out why in a bar of music, say in 4/4, you can gave either a whole note, or four quarter notes, yet they both are counted out the same? So now ive come to understand what the numbers relate to in a time signature, i now need a video that will explain why we have so many different notes that all seem to add up to the same number of beats?????
ОтветитьThis is VERY helpful to my lack of keeping time signature on the drums!
ОтветитьI feel as though I've already learnt in 5 minuetes more than I've all the other videos combined, straight to the point, clearly explained, I would have to say probably the best one I've seen 10/10
ОтветитьOddly enough, this has been the clearest explanation I've found so far. The fact you actually gave simple examples to listen to really helped.
ОтветитьI actually UNDERSTOOD what you said. Thank you very much.
ОтветитьHey uncle brett ur channel is the most random and amazing thing ive ever seen, you are an amazing curious and intelligent guy. Thank u for sharing
ОтветитьNice lesson.... thank u
I would like to ask a question ;
How can I find what is the key I'm in when I sing ?? C &C# & D & D# ETC .....??
🎶😎🎶 Thanks Awesome 👏
ОтветитьThanks for this wonderful tutorial, Brett. Much appreciated. Cheers, Rey
ОтветитьOne small correction; the splitted C cymbol is not 4/4 but 2/2. Could be transcribed to 4/4 but the pulse is different.
ОтветитьThis was great! Thank you so much.
ОтветитьThis was super helpful!
ОтветитьThank you very, very much for this beautiful lesson!
ОтветитьFrom a non musical instrument person: thank you!
ОтветитьYou're a good teacher
Ответитьthx!
Ответить7/8 is 4 beats in a bar plus 3 forths beats in another bar there's a more simple way to learn time signatures if you know math and math is never wrong
ОтветитьThank you so much. I've been trying to figure out how time signstures work for so long and I finally understood.
ОтветитьA British man. As an American I understood almost nothing
ОтветитьWow this was such a good video, thank you 💕
ОтветитьIs it too late to say thanks? This really was illuminating.
ОтветитьThanks!
ОтветитьFinally!!! I couldn't understand it despite being able to play drums and finger cymbals intuitively
ОтветитьBeautifully explained - Thanks.
ОтветитьToo good an explanation worth treasuring by every music learner and the learned too.
I am saving it for myself to practice regularly so as to get the rhythm sense into me.
Excellent - the 5th vid on the subject and it's starting to make sense!
ОтветитьVery clear, thank you!!
ОтветитьGreat video! Very helpful! Thank you!
ОтветитьWow, thank you so much!
ОтветитьThank you so much
Ответить❤❤❤
Ответитьwhy working on readymade music pieces????? thats not professional at all!!!!!!!!!!!!! try to compose ur own music practice that hard part behind the scenes 😉😉😉😉
Ответитьdid music die 9 years ago if i didnt then im sue you have learnt something new in the last few yoears go for it :)
ОтветитьThis video is really good and has helped me understand thank you
ОтветитьThanks for this. I have already struggled to be able to count out anything other than 4/4, 3/4, or 6/8. Splitting them up really makes sense.
ОтветитьThis is helpful. I play a number of instruments and I sing. The problem is I taught myself piano by ear when I was a little kid and I'm equally self-taught on all of the subsequent instruments I became interested in, so I didn't really bother to learn to read much music. When you played the pink floyd/exorcisty thing, it actually wasn't difficult at all from an AUDITORY perspective. It clicked right away, maybe because I've always preferred complex time signatures as they add dimension and subtlety to music. But because my understanding of notation and written music in general is so illiterate, I wanted to at LEAST understand how to speak in terms of rhythm, since I've started playing my own music with other people. "We're playing in 7/8" rather than "You know, like that song from the exorcist? Do that kind of thing, but here's the melody" and then i start humming like a little jackass.
ОтветитьGood stuff! Thank you!
ОтветитьAwesome teacher and great accent!
ОтветитьThank you for this video. I've watched a few other ones to try and understand time signatures but none of them provided examples I could hear. I understand it all a little better now.
ОтветитьThis is my 3er video about this topic and I think I finally got it. And I think it should be called “Count signature” instead of “Time signatures”. Because I just got that what really matters is the count, not the time. The time can be different. 😮
ОтветитьYou are a guiness hero... Amazing... 😊😉👍🏻♥️
ОтветитьGot this for homework💀
ОтветитьThank you! Silly question tho why don't they just call 3/4 "4/4"?
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